Facebook Pixel Elizabeth Marsh The corsair's captive | BBC History UK - education - Read this story on Magzter.com

Try GOLD - Free

Elizabeth Marsh The corsair's captive

BBC History UK

|

Christmas 2025

Taken hostage by a Barbary ship's captain in the 18th century, a young Englishwoman found herself fighting for her freedom in Marrakech. ADAM NICHOLS introduces a brave captive who later wrote a book about her dramatic experiences

- ADAM NICHOLS

Elizabeth Marsh The corsair's captive

The Barbary corsair ship appeared suddenly on the horizon, bristling with cannon. Its decks swarming with armed men, it sliced through the waves at a clip that its quarry - the British merchant ship Ann – could not match. At that time, in the mid-18th century, such pirate attacks were violent, bloody affairs; if the Ann's captain tried to resist, he would be risking the lives of his crew, his passengers and himself, and would likely see his ship sunk. He surrendered.

The corsair captain swaggered aboard the British vessel without firing a shot, and surveyed his captives. He was one of the infamous Sallee Rovers operating out of Salé, on the Atlantic coast of Morocco, who sold any Europeans they captured into slavery. The captain ordered the Ann's four passengers to be taken to his ship, along with the crew, who were chained up in the hold. One of the passengers was a young Englishwoman named Elizabeth Marsh, barely 21 years old. It is because of her that we know these details. She later published an account of her experiences: The Female Captive: A Narrative of Facts Which Happened in Barbary in the Year 1756, Written by Herself.

The corsair attack occurred in August 1756, a few months after the beginning of the Seven Years' War. Marsh's father, an administrator for the Royal Navy, had moved his family from their home in Menorca to Gibraltar, which he considered safer. To further protect his daughter, he then booked her a berth on the Ann, which set sail for England in late July.

Marsh's family aspired to be “respectable people”, and she had received a genteel education. The future planned for her was typical of young women of her position and era: to marry a well-to-do man and bear his children.

MORE STORIES FROM BBC History UK

History Extra

History Extra

Going for gold

PATRICIA FARA recommends a globetrotting, time-travelling account of the roots of chemistry

time to read

2 mins

May 2026

History Extra

History Extra

Viking revenge

JAMES OSBORNE indulges his love of Norse history in a role-playing game that scores high on the visuals but only skates over the underlying history

time to read

1 mins

May 2026

History Extra

History Extra

Siena in five places

One of Tuscany's most magical hilltop cities is a medieval marvel of civic pride.

time to read

3 mins

May 2026

History Extra

History Extra

The great survivor

When Elizabeth II ascended the throne in 1952, she could barely have conceived the currents - imperial retreat, multiculturalism, de-industrialiation – that would transform the nation during her reign. On the centenary of the Queen's birth, David Cannadine explores how she navigated seven decades of dizzying change

time to read

10 mins

May 2026

History Extra

History Extra

Georgian Chocolate Tart

ELEANOR BARNETT serves up a rich chocolate tart that was once fit for a recovering king

time to read

2 mins

May 2026

History Extra

History Extra

Capital ideas

A Kingdom and a Village: A One -Thousand-Year History of Moscow

time to read

1 mins

May 2026

History Extra

History Extra

War report

SAM WILLIS enjoys a richly detailed and entertaining account of Admiral Horatio Nelson's greatest victory and its complicated aftermath

time to read

2 mins

May 2026

History Extra

History Extra

The Peasants Revolt erupts

Popular anger at rising living costs shakes feudal England to its core

time to read

1 mins

May 2026

History Extra

History Extra

Tales of coexistence

HEATHER J SHARKEY is impressed by a sweeping yet nuanced book challenging the idea that Jews and Muslims have been locked in a perpetual state of war

time to read

2 mins

May 2026

History Extra

History Extra

"Narratives of victimhood, resistance and sacrifice are core to the Iranian regime's identity"

Revolution, repression and recurring crisis have shaped Iran's recent past – and continue to define its volatile present

time to read

10 mins

May 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size